Jihadists assaulted a base in the Egyptian Sinai that is manned by international troops, breached the perimeter, and wounded four soldiers. The attackers reportedly raised al Qaeda’s black banner over the base before exiting the base.

Scores of “Bedouin Salafi gunmen” attacked the Multinational Force & Observers base in the Gora region of the Sinai Peninsula yesterday evening, according to The TImes of Israel. The international soldiers are in the Sinai to enforce the peace agreement between Israel and Egypt.

The fighters broke through the outer perimeter and an estimated 60 to 70 of them entered the base “amid heavy gunfire.”

The fighters wounded four peacekeepers, torched a vehicle and a guard tower, and seized ammunition and communications equipment, according to Haaretz. The jihadists reportedly flew al Qaeda’s flag before being driven off.

The base is manned primarily by Colombian troops, however US National Guard members from New Mexico were also at the base. The New Mexico National Guard confirmed the attack.

“Early reports from the unit indicate that the attack was beaten back, and though a few coalition troops from other countries sustained injuries, we have been told that no US soldiers were injured,” New Mexico National Guard said in a statement, according to the Albuquerque Journal.

No group has claimed credit for last night’s attack. But an al Qaeda-linked jiahdist group in the Sinai recently threatened to attack UN peacekeepers and Egyptian troops.

On Aug. 1, Jund al Sharia announced its formation, and threatened to carry out attacks against US peacekeeping forces and the Egyptian military and government if its five demands were not met. The group demanded that the US withdraw from the Sinai within three days [see Threat Matrix report, New jihadist group emerges in the Egyptian Sinai].

Over the past several years, several Salafist groups professing allegiance or admiration for al Qaeda have formed in Sinai Peninsula and the Gaza.

In the Egyptian Sinai, Al Qaeda in the Sinai Peninsula and its military arm, Ansar al Jihad, the Mujahideen Shura Council, and Jund al Sharia have all emerged since the Arab Spring. The terror groups have conducted attacks against Egyptian forces and a pipeline transporting natural gas to Israel.

In Gaza, there are six major al Qaeda-affliated jiahdist groups: the Tawhid and Jihad Group in Jerusalem, the Masada al Mujahideen, the Army of Islam, Jund Ansar Allah, Jaish al Ummah, and Jaish al Mu’minun. These groups have clashed with Hamas, the Muslim Brotherhood-affiliated terror group that rules Gaza and is supported by Iran and Syria.

2 Comments

The Sinai has shaped up to be one of the many nether worlds/’no mans land’ that have come to be challenged by the militant behavior described in the article. I forget who it was but a few decades a political geographer characterized/categorized these ‘pockets’ and ‘swaths’ of earth as Shatterbelts.
It’s beginning to look like Egypt exercises about as much control over the Sinai as the Pakistani’s do with their border with Afghanistan and adjoining tribal areas. It’s also beginning to appear that elements within Egypt’s political/security/military ‘combine’ have or are developing the same kind of questionable relationship’s Pakistan’s ISI has.

As the story says,
“The fighters wounded four peacekeepers, torched a vehicle and a guard tower, and seized ammunition and communications equipment, according to Haaretz. The jihadists reportedly flew al Qaeda’s flag before being driven off.”
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If they could have flown flag, they must have killed certain troops, but the details were kept in hidden.